You're not in Brazil, but you have a TV or a computer with an Internet connection. Welcome to soccer heaven.

When the 2014 FIFA World Cup kicks off Thursday, you will be able to catch every game if you really want to. Every game will air on television, on the radio and online in at least three languages. If you miss a game, you can catch it later online.

Yes, ESPN treats the World Cup as exactly what it is: the world's biggest sporting event. (Apologies to the Olympics and Super Bowl.) They don't dumb down the tone for Americans or treat the sport as an exotic entity or opportunity for standup comedy. It's professional coverage, straightaway, by people who know the sport.

You may come across a few more British accents than you're used to, of course. Many American soccer fans will recognize the voices of Brits Ian Darke, Adrian Healey and Derek Rae, who have been handling play-by-play duty on ESPN for years. Fellow Brits Jon Champion and Daniel Mann, along with Fernando Palomo, ESPN's lead announcer for the Mexican national team, will handle play-by-play duties for the other commentator teams.

But you'll also have well-known American sportscasters like ESPN veteran Bob Ley leading the studio coverage from Rio de Janeiro, backed up by Mike Tirico and British presenter Lynsey Hipgrave. Meanwhile, the dozen analysts and five reporters rounding out the coverage will include retired U.S. national team players Alexi Lalas, Kasey Keller and Taylor Twellman, along with former Venezuelan international Alejandro Moreno, who spent his professional career playing in Major League Soccer. Twellman will join Darke in the broadcast booth to call every U.S. national team match.

Here's the breakdown of how you can follow the games, followed by the full schedule:

Television

All 64 games will be televised on either ESPN, ESPN2 or ABC. ESPN will broadcast most of the matches (43) while ABC will pick up 10 weekend games, including the final. ESPN2 will air the other 11 games, most of which will run simultaneously with other matches airing on ESPN.

Pregame shows start 30 minutes before kickoff, while ESPN's nightly wrap-up show, "World Cup Tonight," will run for an hour and a half.

Radio

ESPN Radio will air every game. The trick is knowing your local ESPN Radio affiliate. ESPN has the official list here, but a more user-friendly version can be found at -- naturally -- Wikipedia by clicking here.

Also, you can listen to ESPN Radio online here or via apps you can download here. For those with satellite radio, Sirius XM channels 84 and 85 will air the games as well.

Longtime soccer broadcaster J.P. Dellacamera will handle the radio play-by-play, and he'll do it in his American accent.

Online

Every match will stream live online on ESPN3.com. If you miss the match, you can watch the recorded match later, as ESPN3 leaves the video online available to viewers. To make sure your Internet service provider allows ESPN3 access -- most do -- click here.

And if you really want to get crazy, ESPN3 even offers an option to watch the game from a full-field camera angle.

Coverage in Spanish and Portuguese

TV: Univision will broadcast 56 matches in Spanish. All those matches will simulcast on Univision Deportes, the Spanish-language sports network that will devote its entire programming schedule to the World Cup during the tourney. Another eight matches will air on Unimas and Galavisión.

Additionally, ESPN Deportes will broadcast 54 matches in Portuguese, with the other 10 matches running online in Portuguese. As with the ESPN2 offerings, most of the online-only matches will be those that conflict with other games' start times.

RADIO: Futbol de Primera radio will air 50 matches, accompanied by pregame and postgame coverage.